163x Filetype PPTX File size 1.25 MB Source: iscar2014.ucsd.edu
The problem • Teaching and learning in schools ⇒ divided into two segr egated structures ↓ • Two discrete and compartmentalized activity systems (E ngeström, 2008) • Teachers’ activity of step-by-step transmission-centered teaching of predefined, fixed knowledge and skills • Students’ activity of enduring “a series of more or less d isconnected though systematically repeated learning ac tions” such as daily assignments (Engeström, 1987, p. 1 04) 2 • The transfer of agency from teacher to student ⇒ minimal in discrete tea ching (Elmore, 2005) • Learning actions around well-define d tasks situates “knowledge with th e teacher and the obligation to lear n with the student—knowledge is tr ansferred, agency over learning is n ot” (p. 282). 3 Purpose of the presentation • To move beyond this narrow idea of schooling and create learning activit ies that foster greater agency amon g students • To determine whether an education al innovation helps children become agents of learning activity 4 “Inquiry” at the UCLA Lab School • Examine art-integrated science an d social studies learning activities called inquiry at the University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) Lab School • Inquiry encourages students to ac cept responsibility for their learnin g (i.e. learner’s sense of agency; O lson, 2011; cf. Lipponen & Kumpul ainen, 2011). 5 Cultural-historical activity theory • A conceptual framework that views the object-oriented collective activity system as the basic unit of analysis of human practices a nd development (Engeström, 1987, 2008; Leont’ev, 1978; Sanni no, Daniels, & Gutiérrez, 2009; Sannino & Ellis, 2013) • Ideas and tools for transforming activity and expanding the agen cy of participants (Yamazumi, 2009) 6
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